April 2010

In 1997, I lived in Ojo Caliente, New Mexico, near the Rio Ojo on the way to the mineral springs. The soil was very sandy, a stark change from the adobe clay I was used to in Taos, and water ran right through it.

There was a small flower bed under a cottonwood tree off to the side of the house. When I see a flower bed, I have an impulsive need to fill it up. I planted it with the leftover flowers and shrubs from the foundation plantings. When I went to water it, though, I realized that my longest hose only reached just inside the edge. I watered the plants in by hand until they seemed established, then I let nature take its course.

yucca2It was a very dry summer, so I turned the hose on that bed a few times to get as much of it wet as I could. The sandy soil was not helpful in keeping things damp! By fall, the pansies and other annuals were crispy, but the hardy native plants had survived. I was moving back to Taos, so I dug those up and took them with me. If anything could have withstood that watering torture (or non-watering torture!), it got a gold star and deserved to come along.

Can you already see why it’s important to plant native species? Only the plants that were used to very little water survived. They did not need more than natural rainfall to get through.

Adaptable species are hardy, too. They may not be native to an area, but they grow and thrive in similar conditions. The sandy soil and climate in Ojo are similar to parts of France and Greece, I was told. Herbs do well in those countries, and mine flourished with very little care in Ojo! I had the most beautiful lavender I’d ever grown! And with little maintenance!

Other reasons for planting native and adaptable species:

monarda_1688> They do not need fertilizer. Native plants are used to growing in the local soil, and that is why they are established there. They get exactly what they need from the environment. You don’t have to add anything.

> They are less prone to disease and pests. Plants that are stressed from too little water are susceptible to attack. An extreme case in point is the bark beetle damage to the pine forests of the Rocky Mountains. After years of drought, the trees were so stressed, bark beetles were able to move in and kill thousands of acres of trees. Like I say, that’s an extreme example of susceptibility. As a homeowner, when you grow drought tolerant species, a drought will not interfere, but you an also choose to water in dry times.

> They offer food and shelter for wildlife. You can attract local birds all year with nectar in summer and berries and seeds in winter. If you planted a yard full of exotic plants, the native animals would not be able to feed, nest or have shelter.

> You will have more time to enjoy your native/adaptable landscape by eliminating water, fertilizer, pesticides and the maintenance that goes along with them.

Do not move to a different part of the country and expect to grow the same plants you grew at home! You can move across town and experience the same thing. Soils, light, humidity and rainfall all affect not just plants, but all wildlife.

Live within your ecosystem to be a conscious gardener. To learn more, get involved in your local or regional Native Plant Society, and check out these books:

For the southwest, I highly recommend Judith Phillips’ books, especially Natural by Design: Beauty and Balance in Southwest Gardens and its companion, Plants for Natural Gardens: Southwestern Native & Adaptive Trees, Shrubs, Wildflowers & Grasses.

        

Here are books for other parts of the country.

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> I generally write about energy efficiency in homes. I encourage everyone to get energy audits and do what they can to tighten up their homes to reduce air leakage and lower energy use and utility bills. Right now, though, it may not be economically feasible to replace windows, insulate and add thermal mass. There is plenty you can do within the home to make it and your life greener, though. Find out with this helpful resource, EWG’s Healthy Home Checklist.

> As a Realtor@ in Taos, I have noticed that the popular and affordable price range for homes dropping. Instead of searching for the $350,000-400,000 home, they now want to spend $200,000-250,000. The prices of the more expensive homes have come down some, but not that far. The lower priced home is the new demand, so they are coming on the market with more frequency. Home values are changing around the country.

> I will say this again: Lenders, appraisers and builders have to be on the same page in order to get energy efficient homes and remodels financed and perhaps rewarded. New legislation, the GREEN Act (Green Resources for Energy Efficient Neighborhoods), HR 2336, supports this and is going to the House for a vote. Please contact your reps in support of HR 2336!

> There is nothing like a competition to get people to do their best, learn new ways and change! The EPA is hosting the National Building Competition, which follows the format of the tv show, The Biggest Loser, a competition to lose weight. Fourteen commercial buildings will strive to reduce waste and energy consumption in 180 days. Energy consumption will be tracked and improvements made. Winners will be announced in October. I am SO looking forward to this! I hope it sets an example and shows others what can be done in their own commercial or residential buildings.

> It wouldn’t be a recap without a link to ONE green home! I love recycling, and I love prefab. This home is both. Actually, it is a studio, and I think it is a piece of art! Recycled materials can be put together in a creative, pleasing, and, of course, functional way. I hope this gives you some ideas for your own home.

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As you know, I am not very materialistic. I don’t buy things if something functional is already in place. I don’t need to be fashionable and switch out my clothes and furnishings according to the latest trends. There are more important things than things, and I choose to put my energy into them instead.

It helps that I am resourceful. I think I picked up this trait from my mother. She could rework anything into something else. Even though she had money and was an active participant in the post-WWII consumption, she was a frugal recycler in her own small way.

That said, I’d like to share with you my sitting area on the back porch. It’s not fancy, but it works. I spend sunny summer mornings here with coffee reading, writing or just looking at the views and letting my mind wander. Many a cold beer has been consumed in the shade here on warm evenings. When friends come to visit, I bring out a portable camp chair.

summer office

> The chair is from my mother’s house. This was a full set of outdoor furniture – dining table and chairs, a coffee table, easy chairs and a chaise lounge. It filled our screened porch when I was a kid in the 60s. My brother has most of it, and I have two of these chairs. The other one is where the afternoon sun shines, great for spring, fall and winter.

> I bought the bamboo table at a yard sale in 1996 for $1. ‘Nuf said.

> In my recent and continuous spring/moving cleaning, I emptied the green milk crate of small flower pots and took them to the Habitat for Humanity Re-Store. Voila! Instant side table.

My lifestyle is not for everyone, but I want to make the point that we don’t need to be constantly purchasing new things to be happy. When you are tempted to go shopping, ask yourself if you really need that item, then try to repurpose something else instead. Alternatively, go to a yard sale or thrift shop and buy something someone else was thoughtful enough to keep out of a landfill.

When you buy second hand or hang onto things you have until they are no longer usable, you reduce emissions by eliminating the need for a new item to be manufactured and transported. Lower your emissions, consumption and carbon footprint by repurposing what you have or buying used.

When you spend less on unnecessary items, you obviously save money. Americans go to work to support their shopping habits. I know in this economy, many people are struggling to keep their homes and feed their families. The evil credit card, though, has allowed us to purchase things we do not want or need but feel we must have. It lets us live lifestyles we cannot truly afford. If we could get out from under our credit cards and live on what we actually make, we would be living a lot more simply and maybe working less.

I have more second-hand furniture.

Happy recycling/repurposing/thrifting/yard sale-ing!

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In honor of Earth Week and Earth Day last week, PBS aired a lot of informative, interesting and well-put-together documentaries. Here’s what moved me.

food incFood, Inc. (POV) – I already knew most of what was in this documentary, but it was informative to the masses who never ask where their food comes from. If you have not seen it, do. I bet you will seek out organic, local, humanely raised meat after watching it! Question your butcher and your favorite restaurants, too. What you eat out is harder to control than what you prepare at home. Take it a step further and stop eating meat altogether, if you’re interested in truly reducing emissions and your carbon footprint.

dirt the movieDIRT! The Movie (Independent Lens) – Having a degree in horticulture, and gardening professionally and personally for the last 30+ years, I knew most of this information, too. Soil Science was my favorite class. Because of test phobia, I chose to write a 20 page paper on soil formation instead of taking an exam. I almost went on to study further, but all the jobs were in government, and I was clear that was not where I wanted to be.

I resonated with DIRT! The Movie. I know what it’s like to stick your nose in a handful of forest soil and come away like you’ve just smelled deep purple lilacs. I know the feeling of amazement watching a compost pile do its thing – kitchen scraps, grass trimmings and plant stalks gradually turning to black soil that goes back into the garden. This is nature at its core, and the very act of soil generation shows us how the planet takes care of herself. Watch this movie to see the why and the how of aiding that process.

earth_daysEarth Days (American Experience) – I had to watch this history of Earth Day four times, because I loved it so much. This was the history of the current environmental movement, and it all took place in my entire lifetime.

After World War II, there was a prosperity boom. Suburbs began their sprawl, convenience was the norm, cars were big, and oil was cheap. We also mistakenly believed oil would always be cheap and plentiful, so we used it. Our society was based on it – cars, airplanes, electricity, cities. The smog grew thick in major cities like New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, and our health was threatened by the environment for the first time ever.

Abundance was another keyword of the 50s. Materialism equaled success. Consumption began its out-of-control path, creating the need for more manufacturing plants, energy, oil and transportation.

The Industrial Revolution started this problem, but the prosperity- and abundance-laden 50s catapulted the earth into a cloud of smog.

I was born and grew up in this era. I lived in a suburb with a freezer full of Clarence Birdseye frozen fruits and vegetables and Swanson frozen tv dinners.

My dad drove a few miles to work every day and came home for lunch. My mother drove to town whenever she felt she needed something. She’d make a trip for groceries, and come home. Then she’d go out for stamps, even though she’d passed the post office on her first trip. Maybe she’d go out for shoes later in the day, and if we needed something after school, we’d drive to get it. In the evening, maybe we’d go to the mall (called a ‘shopping center’ back then).

The car and what was perceived to be plentiful oil allowed her to do this. And she was not the only one! The 50s were an illusion of freedom, and no one saw the consequences.

‘I voted for the interstate highway program, which I see now is a great mistake.’ Stewart Udall

The 60s

In the 60s, DDT was sprayed liberally in neighborhoods as a convenient way to kill annoying bugs. It was also killing the not-so-annoying varieties as well as the iconic American Bald Eagle. Our national symbol was the first animal on the newly created Endangered Species List.

Rachel Carson published Silent Spring in 1962, and this was the beginning of awareness about the ecological devastation caused by pesticide use. Carson showed the interconnectedness of every living thing on the planet and how annihilating one part affected all parts. Our alienation from nature was more than evident. This book is a must read. It was, pardon the cliche, a catalyst for change.

‘I truly believe that we, in this generation, must come to terms with nature, and I think we’re challenged, as mankind has never been before, to prove our maturity and mastery, not of nature, but of ourselves.’ Rachel Carson

Rebellion

By the late 60s, ‘the revolution’ was in full swing. Hippies were rebelling against the establishment – government, greed, corporations, cities, money, war, and anything considered traditional and tech-y. The back-to-the-land movement birthed egalitarian communes and simple, natural, spiritual lifestyles with the earth as the centerpiece.

Out of that anti-establishment, back-to-the-land movement came Earth Day in 1970. It was a political act to say Screw You to government and corporations and to bring awareness to their negative affect on our planet. The message was Greed and ecology don’t mix.

Earth Day speeches were about the exact same issues we have today in the exact same words – energy independence, energy conservation, solar, over-population, air pollution, carbon, energy efficiency, overuse of natural resources, Middle Eastern oil.

What has changed?

The rest of the 70s saw President Nixon create the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), President Carter put solar panels on the White House, and Americans suffer through the ‘oil embargo’ of 1973. I put that in quotes, because I’m not sure it was real, but it did show us that we were (and still are) at the mercy of the Middle East. Our country was crippled when the price of gas quadrupled in the time span of a few months.

President Reagan took office in 1980, and one of his first acts was to remove Jimmy Carter’s solar panels from the White House (‘We lost 30 years.’ Hunter Lovins). He also slashed the budgets of agencies doing environmental work. Any vestige of the rebellious and productive 60s and 70s was gone, and we’ve never regained that momentum.

My Place in It All

What moved me about Earth Days is that I have lived through and witnessed the entire history of the modern environmental movement. I was born into the problem and, proudly, naturally and enthusiastically, became part of the solution. The guests in the show, political and environmental activists in the 60s and 70s, clearly spoke of my experiences and convictions, and that was warm and comforting. I felt like we had grown up together!

Before I saw this, I’d been wondering what my part is in the modern environmental movement. I often feel as though the history has been forgotten, as though the environmental movement just started in the last few years. The history is important! It is who I am, and when people don’t care about that history, I feel invisible and start wondering:

> What is my role, aside from continuing to live lightly?
> I know where I came from, but where am I going?
> Where do I fit in?
> How can I not feel so stagnant?
> What do I have to offer?

What is my role among the 21st century environmental activists, who research environmentalism, teach it and apply it to their lives? I am a 20th century environmentalist, having been been there from the beginning. Where is my place today?

I still haven’t answered those questions, but having spent several evenings with Stewart Udall, Rachel Carson, various scientists, the creators of Earth Day, the author of The Population Bomb, Hunter Lovins, Stephanie Mills and several others, I feel grounded, like my foundation has been rebuilt, like someone understands me. I feel I can move forward, but I’m just not sure to where.

I do see that this is the problem:

‘Every morning, six billion people get up, have breakfast, and go to work, do their thing, and come home at night. Environmental problems emerge out of daily life. The solutions for environmental problems are also rooted in daily life. We need six billion people to get up and have a different consciousness and do things differently.’ Dennis Meadows

And that this is the solution:

‘You owe a responsibility to your children, your grandchildren and their children.’ Stewart Udall

I recommend watching Earth Days to see how it all got started.

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> I’ve wanted to be an architect since I was about four years old. I am going back to school to realize that dream, hoping to someday be on a team that designs a house that wins a spot in the The U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon.

> What constitutes the perfect home for you? This self-sufficient home is damn near perfect for me! It’s only drawback is… it’s in Australia!

> Camping season is upon us. I go camping to get away from the constant onslaught of info via technology. There is no privacy or quiet time with incoming texts and phone calls, round-the-clock newsfeeds on Twitter and friend updates on Facebook. I’m not even talking about working in real estate, which is another bombardment via email and phone! Camping is big time chill time for me! When I saw the headline of this article, I almost gagged, thinking there were new ways to keep the laptop, cell and/or tv fully charged. But I was pleasantly surprised! Here are some 21st century camping gadgets that will solarize your time in the wilderness.

> When my parents passed away, they were living in a snazzy retirement home in North Carolina. It was far from cookie cutter and had all the upscale finishing touches for which they paid dearly! Although I will probably never retire, my dream retirement home would be energy efficient, passive solar and earthy, like this concept design for Novato, CA.

> My house was built in 1964, long before lead paint was outlawed. I did not do a lead paint inspection when I bought it, but when I remodeled in 2007, I wasn’t sure if we were unearthing lead paint in the untouched-for-decades walls. If I were to remodel today, literally, starting today, April 22, 2010, my contractor would need special training and certification.

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Everyone is talking about what they are doing on April 22, 2010, the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, an annual day to honor the earth. There are events (I hope you are not flying to one!), and group and personal gestures. My day will be filled with the latter.

On Thursday, I will wake up and get out of bed. The flannel sheets on my bed are thinning, and most of middle America would have replaced them by now. To me, they have many miles left in them, and when their purpose as bed coverings has expired, they will be torn up and used as rags. I recently put a hole-y old flannel sheet in my rag bin.

coffeeI will patter to the kitchen for a cup of organic coffee (sorry, not Fair Trade, but bought in bulk) with a dash of organic half & half. I will check my email, post green news on Twitter to educate the masses, and play word games on Facebook to stay in touch with far-away friends (greener and more frugal than travel). (photo: flickr rore)

Breakfast will be plain organic yogurt with organic strawberries and Stevia (not so green, since it’s been processed from a plant to white powder for the convenience of Americans who don’t want to be inconvenienced). Maybe I’ll have an omelet of local eggs and Tillamook cheese, topped with New Mexico green chile, and a side of organic beet greens from my greenhouse. I’ll follow that with more coffee or tea with Fair Trade organic sugar. I’ll take what I call ‘my meds,’ herbal and natural supplements that are part of a preventive health care program, to avoid going to the doctor or hospital, since I don’t have insurance.

laundry on the clothesline in the New Mexico sunWeather permitting, I will do a load of laundry in my efficient front-loading Kenmore washer, and hang it outside in the disinfecting sun. I will water my organic vegetable and herb gardens, and walk around the yard to see which wildflowers are in bloom.

I’ll take a shower with hot water from my solar thermal system, using little or no natural gas to heat the water. I’ll use soap that is locally made.

I will work from home making phone calls, emailing clients, and emailing docs or using efax. If I need to print something, it will be on recycled paper.

If I go to my office, which is in my broker’s home (the green alternative to an external office with extra utility usage and bills), I’ll drive my Ford Escape Hybrid, coasting in electric mode the last three of the six miles, spewing no emissions. I will have packed a nice organic lunch of leftovers and brought my reusable Nathan water bottle.

Taos MountainIf I need to, I will run a week’s worth of errands on my drive home. I’ll stop for cat food (not green, made by Nestle, but it’s the only brand she does not throw up – there’s always a trade-off) and the compressed pine nugget cat litter (very green, made from wood scraps). I’ll get some organic produce, and check my mail. I may even visit with a friend. At home, I’ll change my clothes and go for a walk to enjoy the beauty that surrounds my home in Taos. Walking is more preventive health care, and natural beauty and fresh air are food for the soul.

Dinner will be organic vegetables with tofu or quinoa and an organic salad with Trader Joe’s dressing (not organic, but frugal). Maybe I’ll even have a beer from the most sustainable brewery in the country, New Belgium. I’ll put the bottle in my recycling bin.

Fat Tire

Evening will be spent in the vegetable garden, watering and picking weeds, or in the yard raking up last year’s dead growth to put in the brush pile. I’ll come in about dark, snack on organic fruit, and continue to sift through my belongings to see what I can bring to my neighbor’s yard sale this weekend. I’ll make a pile of books and magazines for the library, and clothes for the free box. Other things will be slated for the Habitat for Humanity Re-store down the street. Paper will get burned to take off the spring chill in the house. This is ongoing for me, but when I move later this year, I want to bring as little as possible with me.

I will go to bed early, since a good night’s sleep is more preventive health care. I’ll get up and do it again on Friday.

Every day is Earth Day.

earth

(photo: flickr NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)

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(This is the final installment in a 10-part series. The previous post is here, or you can start at the beginning.)

My friend, Alva Morrison, has been in the weatherization industry for many years, working for the sate of New Mexico helping families in need tighten up their homes with insulation, caulking and funding. As energy audits got popular for the general public, his natural next step was to become an Energy Rater. Special training and equipment is needed for this job, which entails sealing up a house, running air through it, analyzing air leakage through computer software and offering recommendations.

When my construction was done, Alva and I decided to do an energy audit. Instead of guesswork, I wanted documentation of my energy savings were and how I could make improvements to further save.

A blower door test determines energy usage. Alva determined the volume of the house, then we talked about construction details. He plugged that information into his software, then we sealed up the windows and exterior doors, leaving the interior doors open for maximum air flow.

He installed the blower in the kitchen door.

blower door test, interior       blower door_3631

The red canvas was sealed all the way around to make the door air-tight. The blower was plugged into his laptop, then turned on to create air movement, which was registered in the software. We looked for areas where air was coming in. Alva caulked a few old window frames, and rechecked the figures.

We were surprised at some of the results and recommendations. Here are his comments:

“Nan’s house is a great example of what can be done to turn a pretty average house, built to code a couple of decades ago, into a modern energy-efficient home. If built as is today, it would exceed qualification for the USEPA Energy Star certification, even though many of the walls still have 2×4 insulation in a 2×6 wall. The main factor driving the house’s lean performance is a thick blanket of attic insulation. But the solar hot water and the balmy sunroom, with a thick adobe wall to catch and hold the heat, provide solid backing. Add to that a refrigerator, which squeezes kilowatts until they scream, and you have a working person’s house to take us all through the next century of global warming both economically and comfortably. All these things were added to the house by Nan at moderate expense.

“Analyzing possible improvements was very interesting. Tearing off sheetrock and re-insulating the walls seemed like it should be a no-brainer. But when we ran it through the computer, it only showed a savings of around $25 a year- not much reward for all that trouble. The moral is, heat goes up, not sideways.

“However, we found another weaker spot in the building’s ‘heating envelope’: the uninsulated foundation. A quick rework of the house through the energy rating software showed that digging a barrier of four inch rigid foam in around the perimeter of the foundation would return $175 a year – and that’s if the cost of wood and gas stays the same (don’t hold your breath for that!). Get out your shovel, Nan!”

As you can see, an energy audit gives you a lot of information on how to improve your home. I had him calculate a HERS (Home Energy Rating System) score, because I wanted to be able to show others the entire process.

The number of a HERS score is based on the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), which is 100. My score was 88, meaning my house is 12% more efficient than the code. The lower your number, the more efficient your home is. When I make improvements, Alva can plug that information into his software, re-analyze the results and give me new recommendations.

Many municipalities, including Taos, are beginning to require HERS scores on new construction. I highly recommend an audit, and, speaking as a Realtor®, I use them as an effective marketing tool for your home. Buyers can see current efficiency and how it can be improved. There are fewer surprises and disappointments after purchase.

Find a certified local Energy Rater through RESNET – Residential Services Energy Network

The entire remodel can be seen on my website, Solar Retrofit 2007.

(Originally published at www.greenbuyguide.com.)

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hummingbird 4.12.10 – The first hummingbird was at the feeder this morning! He is early! I expect them around April 15 (easy to remember, since it’s tax day….), and they generally come in later than that. (photo: flickr s p e x)

Yesterday, I washed the feeder and filled it half-way with food to attract them. This morning, I was sitting near it on the back porch, and the hummer dive-bombed the feeder. He scared me – loud, fast and too close! But I was glad to see him and more glad that I put the feeder up yesterday.

There are not many plants in flower this time of year for hummers, so a feeder is the only way to get them used to coming to your garden. Hummers don’t sense food by smell, but by color. They drink nectar from red tubular flowers, and feeders are made to resemble them. The food in the feeder does not need to be red, but if you buy a commercial preparation, it will look like Kool-Aid (not the political kind). I make my own mix – 1 part white sugar, 3 parts water. The sugar has to be dissolved completely, so I use warm water and stir vigorously. Extra can go in the fridge, but be sure to label it.

Keep your feeder out of the sun, because the food can get moldy. Bugs also climb in there and die. Wash it out with soapy hot water and rinse well each time you change the food.

Hummingbirds come back to the same feeding spots every year, so once you start feeding them, you will always have them. One year, my cat killed about ten. I didn’t think there would be any the following year, but I had plenty!

hummingbird at feeder

(photo: flickr brendan.lally.)

They check in at my house in April for a few weeks, then they leave. They return when the hollyhocks start blooming in late May. This is their natural food, but by putting up a feeder in the spring, I have shown them this is a yummy place to eat. They leave around the middle of September for Mexico. Not a bad idea, huh?

For hummingbirds all summer, plant a garden that includes these shrubs and perennials to attract them:

> Penstemon (Penstemon spp)
> Columbine (Aquilegia spp)
> Bee Balm (Mondara spp)
> Hollyhock (Alcea rosea
> Autumn Sage (Savlia gregii
> Desert Willow (Chiloppsis linearis)
> Coral Honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens)
> Trumpet Creeper (Campsis radicans)
> Agastache ‘Firebird’ (Agastache sp.)

And always grow organically. Please!

hummingbird

(photo: flickr hart_curt)

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> Cooling a home is as important as heating a home. Adequate ceiling insulation prevents the sun’s heat from penetrating into living spaces. Windows can be coated to allow the sun to come in without heating the room. (Read my post about energy efficient windows for more info.) They can also be placed to catch prevailing breezes. Or walls can be made of mosquito netting for full-house ventilation.

> When I bought my house, it needed a new roof. The shingles were blowing off in the spring winds, and a small leak had started in my bedroom. I so wanted to do an interior remodel, but a wise building friend of mine said to replace the roof or whatever I did inside wouldn’t matter as a leak dripped on it. So a new roof it was. Interior remodeling came later.

Last week, I read a Mother Earth News article by Don Chiras about sealing up your house before applying any other energy conservation measures – new furnace, solar, etc. The point was the same. Creating and saving energy would be wasted if a leaky home drew that extra heat outside.

This week, I found an article at BuildingScience.com about energy conservation circa 1970 compared to today, with the same ‘big picture’ ideas. What have we learned, and how are we going to apply it?

> If you read me regularly here, on Twitter or Facebook, you know I can’t stand coal. There is no such thing as clean coal, and I am talking way before there is one speck of an emission from a coal plant. It is toxic in the ground, causing respiratory diseases in miners, nevermind dangerous explosions like the one last week in West Virginia. One main argument for the continued use of coal is that it is ‘cheap.’ But is it really?

> If you read me regularly, you also know I am contemplating a move to Arizona. Not Phoenix or Tucson, where cooling costs are more important than heating costs, but still to a place with warmer summers than Taos, where opening a window is our cooling strategy. Passive solar is just as effective at cooling as it is heating. How, you ask?

> The general notion is that solar PV is too expensive to be cost-effective. Home- and business-owners are afraid they will never realize their investment. That’s not always true anymore. Look at this financial breakdown of a commercial PV installation.

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It is easy to cut back on paper at home and work!

> Send digital greeting cards. Everyone loves to receive a card. It’s a sign of affection and thoughtfulness, yet the greeting card business uses a lot of paper. Go digital for your cards. I did at Christmas time, except for the small handful of friends and family that do not use email. Instead of hours addressing and licking envelopes, and a lot of money for cards and postage, I spent less than an hour copy/pasting email addresses into a website. No paper used, no money spent, and the recipients were just as happy! I saved a few trees, too!

> Read the news online. I don’t buy the local paper anymore, because I can read it online. All newspapers now have an RSS feed, which is like a big bookmark system. I have all my news sites in Google Reader, and I can skim them over several times a day. I subscribe to two magazines, and I may let them lapse when the subscriptions run out. There is no reason to read hard copy newspapers and magazines anymore.

> Read books from the library, buy used, or share with friends. I have been a library fan since I was a kid. I love books, info and adventures. My problem with the library is I like to read in the bathtub, so I frequently buy used books. There used to be a second-hand bookstore here that let you buy a book, then return it for another, like a library. I was in there often! See if stores near you will do this. I buy books from Amazon for a dollar, pay a few bucks shipping, and have a used book for little output. My personal problem with this is shipping – not so green – but there is a trade-off with every green action. I sell used books on Amazon, too, so I’m part of the problem on both ends, but then again, I’m also part of the solution.

Get an e-reader. I don’t have one. I spend enough time in front of a computer screen during the day, I don’t want to do my recreational reading on one, too. And I like to read in the tub! I also like to underline and make notes in my books, so an e-reader won’t work for me. I do love pen and paper!

> Reuse paper printed on one side. If I am printing something out for my own information, like an article I want to make notes on or a receipt for my bookkeeping, I use the backside of a page that’s printed. I have a stack of these at work – there is a lot of paperwork in real estate. If those pages start to pile up, I staple them together creating a scratch pad. Frequently, this stack grows faster than I can use it, which made me see how much paper is used and wasted in the world every day. I am very conservative with resources, and paper even piles up for me! That revelation made me more determined to cut back on paper.

Of course, paper I do not use gets recycled or burned in the woodstove. A ton of recycled paper saves 17 trees. I hope this motivates you to recycle.

> Read my Eco-living Tips post about digital banking.

> Buy recycled paper whenever you can – copy paper, paper towels, toilet paper, tissues, greeting cards (if you must buy them). Make sure there is Post-consumer Waste Content on the label. The higher that number, the more paper is staying out of the landfills. Some products are 100% PCW, but most are 35% and above.

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